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Ora Quick News Story   Message List  
Reply | Forward Message #223 of 1137 |
Use of Rapid HIV Test in Public Settings 'Raising Concern' About
How
People Receive Results

Access this story and related links online:
http://www.kaisernetwork.org/daily_reports/rep_index.cfm?DR_ID=18002


Seattle health officials today are beginning a "trial run"
of a rapid HIV
test in an undisclosed public setting, "raising concern"
among some gay and
AIDS advocates about how people will receive their results in public
places, the Boston Globe reports. The local health department hopes
that
the trial run using the test, called OraQuick, will lay the
groundwork for
a larger program to offer the test in gay bathhouses and sex clubs.
The
health department has drafted protocols for using the rapid test in
public
settings, and it currently offers the traditional HIV test, which can
take
up to a week to get results, in gay venues. The tests are offered in
private rooms and administered by health care workers. Since 1998,
the
health department has tested 1,200 men in three gay venues in Seattle,
according to the Globe. Of the 56 men who tested positive -- 4.7% of
the
total number tested -- 23%, or 15 men, did not return for their test
results the next week. "If we had been using a rapid test,
those ...
people would have at least received preliminary positive results and
would
have been informed of the need to return to our clinic for
confirmatory
results," Frank Chaffee, HIV/AIDS program manager for the
Seattle-King
County Department of Public Health, said (Sanders, Boston Globe,
5/30).

CDC Recommendations


The CDC in April released a revised HIV/AIDS prevention strategy,
which
targets the estimated 200,000 people in the United States who are
HIV-positive but are unaware of their status. The agency urged local
health departments to use the rapid HIV test -- which was approved by
the
FDA in November 2002 for use in about 40,000 hospitals and clinics
with
laboratories -- in all federally funded clinics, as well as places
such as
homeless shelters, jails and substance abuse treatment centers. In
February, President Bush announced expanded availability for OraSure
Technologies' OraQuick HIV test, which offers results that are 99.6%
accurate within 20 minutes, to more than 100,000 doctors' offices and
public health clinics. AIDS groups had advocated for making the test
more
widely available to the general public. The CDC also recommended
simplifying the pre-test counseling process (Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS
Report,
4/17). However, the CDC does not yet have recommendations on the use
of
the rapid test or what type of counseling should accompany the test,
leaving such decisions up to local health authorities. A CDC
official,
speaking on the condition of anonymity, said that although the agency
is
rethinking counseling strategies, it still believes the process is
important. According to the Globe, the CDC plans to conduct research
over
the next year to determine the best ways to combine counseling with
the
rapid test.

Working in Counseling


The speed and portability of the new HIV test means that some people
may
find out they are HIV-positive in places where counseling and other
services may not be immediately available, Fred Swanson, executive
director
for Gay City Health Project, said. Local health officials say that
they
can successfully combine counseling and testing in public locations.
The
health department has drafted its own protocols for using the rapid
test.
"Our big challenge, and one of the big goals for the Centers for
Disease
Control, is to try to increase the number of people with HIV
infection who
know that," Chaffee said, adding, "One, because people who
have HIV and
don't know it are losing the benefits of good medicine. ... And two,
we
know from a variety of studies that when people know they have HIV
infection, they are much more careful with their sexual and
needle-sharing
partners." Although Washington state law requires pre- and
post-test
counseling, the law is not specific as to what the counseling should
entail, according to the Globe. "Are recipients of positive
test results
going to be able to internalize the information they've received
around the
(new) test when they don't have any time to mull the information
over?"
Paul Feldman of Seattle's Lifelong AIDS Alliance asked. Swanson said
that
although he is worried about possible negative effects of using the
rapid
test in public settings, he said that he is reassured by the fact
that the
rapid testing will not occur immediately in gay bathhouses and sex
clubs.
"What's exciting to me is that the local health department
recognizes that
there may be some challenges, and as such is doing a trial run,"
he added
(Boston Globe, 5/30).






Fri May 30, 2003 11:46 pm

alex@...
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